Case Study - From Pilot To Policy
Case Study - From Pilot To Policy
Case Study - From Pilot To Policy
From pilot to policy: Introducing community-based social services in Bulgaria 2002 2008
June 2009
The year is 2000. Unemployment is at all time high 18 percent, most affecting those over the age of 50. At the same time, social services come mostly in the form of cash transfers, leaving elderly people and people with disabilities to care for themselves, or to be institutionalized. The prospect of European Union membership pushes major reform efforts, and the Government of the Republic of Bulgaria prepares the landscape for quality social services to be introduced into communities. It is decided to match these two groups in need: those who need employment with those who need care.
Bulgaria at a glance
Population: 7.97 million Human development index (HDI) 0.824 (53rd out of 177)
1 January 2007
Member of the European Union 1989 present Republic of Bulgaria, parliamentary democracy 1946 1989 Peoples Republic of Bulgaria, communist state 1878 1944 Constitutional monarchy 1396 1878 Ottoman Empire 1185 Restoration of the Bulgarian state 1018 1185 Byzantine Empire
This case study is intended to spark a debate, or at least get you to think about how to best evaluate capacity development initiatives. It was written so that you would be able to answer and discuss some of the following questions: Did the project help to develop, enhance or retain capacities that contributed to improved development effectiveness and human development? Despite the fact that the project started before capacity development was integrated into the project or country programme, it nevertheless adopted many aspects of the capacity development approach intuitively - to what extent was the capacity development approach applied?
The project also grew past its original purpose and expectations. How do you measure
unintended, yet important outcomes? How do you balance strategic thinking and flexibility? What kind of monitoring and evaluation system was put in place? Was it able to measure effectiveness as well as changes in capacity? How was national ownership nurtured? What were its sources?
How does capacity development fit into UNDPs world of results based management? How can other approaches be incorporated, such as change management, or systems based approaches? What kind of partnerships and relationships were established throughout the project? Was dialogue with partners established from the beginning of the project? How do you think this factors into the success of the project? Once capacities are developed and strengthened, how are they best retained? Do you think the project was sustainable? Why or why not? To what extent were the capacities developed for the municipality to deliver social services? What about NGOs and the central government? Did the project contribute to the development of a better long-term national policy response to the unemployed in pre-retirement age? Did it make a significant difference in peoples lives? What is the best way to measure this? What was the effect on employment? Income? To what extent did the project provide opportunities for people who did not have them before?
n the run up to European Union (EU) membership, the Republic of Bulgaria carried out sweeping socioeconomic and administrative reforms. There was a great willingness for reform within the Government, and the EU agenda served to bring national development goals and priorities to light. Negotiations for membership proved to be a never failing tool for consensus building and mobilizing public support. Changes in social policy and the introduction of alternative social services were accelerated during the adoption of EU standards and policy makers were, at the same time, responding to high and persistent unemployment, with rates reaching an unprecedented 18 percent in 2000. In 2001, new social policy was adopted in order to increase employment, reduce poverty, overcome social exclusion and modernize the social assistance system. The Law for the Encouragement of Employment was passed in 2001, and an Employment Agency was created in order to give new impetus to active labour market policies. The Governments employment promotion policy increasingly targeted the most vulnerable groups in the labour market. Those in pre-retirement age (ages 50 and above) were the most affected, constituting over 50 percent of the unemployed, mainly due to economic restructuring and massive lay-offs. In 2001, there were over 135,000 people in this category. Those who qualified for unemployment benefits would receive between 42 and 72 euros per month from the state.
Velichkov, Kamen. Bulgarias EU Accession Negotiations: Achievements and Challenges p. 3
The Social Assistance Act (1998) was updated in 2003 to better reflect the needs of citizens who required help to meet basic needs, and allowed for community level social services that would make it easier for people to live independently.
The only care provided to people in their homes was delivery of cooked meals, but this was not available to all who needed it. For example, in the municipality of Pravetz in 2002, only 60 people received this service when approximately 1,500 people were in need of it. A Child Protection Act was passed in 2003, with the aim of providing necessary services within the home, in order to keep children with their families. Previously, if a family could not provide care to a disabled child, their only option was to place him or her in an institution. This applied to all those who were not able to take care of themselves. The Government wanted to decrease the number of people placed in specialized institutions, acknowledging that most were situated outside residential areas, in poor condition, and without a mechanism to ensure that minimum standards of quality care were met a human rights issue. Until amendments in 2003, social assistance came mainly in the form of cash transfers. The amended Social Assistance Act elaborated the different types of social services that could be provided at the local level, but also stipulated that other services could be
introduced based on the needs of citizens. This flexibility would prove to be an important factor in the delivery of quality care that was being explored at the community level beneficiaries of social services had been given a role in developing the standards of care that would eventually be adopted for the country. Local governments became responsible for social assistance after decentralization efforts in the late 1990s. However, most lacked the necessary financial resources, and the poorest municipalities were ill equipped to respond to the poverty in their communities. They also lacked experience in the provision of social assistance or services. With this in mind, amendments to the Social Assistance Act also opened the door to non-state organizations to provide social services in communities. The Ministry of Labour and Social Policy wanted to match the supply and demand those who needed employment with those who needed care, and approached UNDP Bulgaria with a project idea. The Ministry wanted to train the unemployed in the vulnerable age group of over 50 as social assistants, who could then provide social services to the elderly, people with permanent disabilities, and children with disabilities in their own homes. The main goal of the project was to contribute to the development of a long term national policy that would ensure the transition from institutional social care to sustainable community based social services. in Pravetz, there were 250 people with disabilities, 20 children with disabilities and over 100 elderly people living alone. Furthermore, the study looked at local capacities (state institutions and non-governmental organizations) to provide social services, as well as the needs and attitudes of potential beneficiaries and their relatives towards receiving social care in their homes, and of the unemployed towards providing care to vulnerable groups. The study revealed a keen interest at the local level to combine job creation for those in pre-retirement with social service delivery. Municipal Administrations, municipal social assistance and labour offices as well as a number of NGOs expressed their willingness and readiness to participate in the project. Although researchers expressed some doubt regarding the capacity of the municipalities and local institutions to cope with a recognizably large amount of work, the study revealed that there were existing sufficient capacities at the local level to implement project activities. In December of 2002, the Deputy Minister of Labour and Social Policy, Ms. Hristina Hristova hosted a meeting that brought together representatives from the municipal administrations, the local labour and social assistance directorates from the four municipalities that would pilot the project, as well as UNDP. The project manager presented the project, its activities for the first quarter of 2003, and discussion and questions were encouraged.
Whos who
Local partners are members of the Joint Commission, the decision making body at the local level, responsible for monitoring implemention. It also approves the menu of social services, the list of beneficiaries and the evaluation criteria for performance of social assistants.
Municipal Administration
Employment Agency
Provides technical consulting on issues related to employment, contracting, monitors social services
Developed procedures and mechanisms for project work, monitored activities in pilot municipalities and provided methodological guidance
UNDP
Central Level
Who does what at the local level Beneficiaries Receive care, provide feedback on services Social Assistants Provide care and feedback Social Service Provider NGOs Set up and manage local office Interview, select and contract candidates Prepare work plans for social assistants, and evaluate their work Coordinate and participate in selection of beneficiaries Monitoring and reporting
Social Assistance Directorate Implements social policy at local and regional level Informs community about available services Assesses needs in the community Decides on menu of social services Reviews beneficiary cases Assesses performance of service provider Municipal Administration Co finances project activities Determines user fees, manages income Monitors administrative and financial activities of NGO Support public awareness Labour Office Directorate Coordinates selection of social assistants
In January 2003 project staff visited the municipalities and met with representatives of the local institutions. UNDP sent letters to all municipal authorities, requesting nominations for the Joint Commissions, consisting of members from the Municipal Administration, the Labour Office Directorates, and the Social Assistance Directorates in each municipality. Representatives were nominated from all local institutions. NGOs would later be included in the Joint Commission, responsible for decision making as well as monitoring implementation of the project at the local level. The survey also revealed some interesting reservations and inherent social beliefs. The idea of having strangers come into the home was foreign to Bulgarian society, where it was believed that the family should take care of its own. The project would profoundly challenge this belief, as well as the attitude toward care giving in general. Another survey was carried out in 2003 to determine an acceptable monthly fee that beneficiaries would pay for the services they receive. A questionnaire was developed and a representative sample from target groups in each municipality was interviewed. The rate was waived for children with disabilities. A monthly rate of $3.28 (5.7 BGN) was determined, but would later be adjusted, with each fee determined per specific beneficiary. As time went on, the project ended up adopting a very flexible model in general, allowing for adaptations to local needs. For example, a person who did not fall into one of the projects target groups, but who was in a crisis situation and had no alternative for social care could become a beneficiary. Services that were not on the list could be provided on a case by case basis, such as snow removal in winter. In 2003, in the four municipalities first selected to pilot the project, the local Social Assistance Directorate was responsible for providing social services. This responsibility was later transferred to local NGOs, after it was determined that they had sufficient capacities to ensure the provision of quality care.
Training for NGOs was based on a needs assessment con-
It helped that the social assistant was recognized as an official profession in 2006, allowing people in the community to think that the service would provide longterm support. At the beginning, one assistant said: It was unemployment that made me work as a social assistant but I have no other choice. As social assistants gained practical working experience and were educated in social work, pride in the work was revealed in statements such as: It is a new profession very human and useful. People accept me, they trust me and I feel satisfied. I work with children with physical and cognitive disabilities and I feel their warmness. At the beginning, social assistants would often provide services to beneficiaries after working hours, and on weekends and holidays to show full support and responsibility. The training encouraged them to think of themselves as professionals who needed a work/life balance and to work according to the terms of their contract.
were selected Vidin, Byala Slatina, Vratza and Berkovitza, bringing the total to eight municipalities that were piloting the new model for locally delivered social services. In the beginning of 2004, the project was revised, to cover additional municipalities, and place more emphasis on improving the quality of services. The change in strategy reflected the role of the project in supporting the introduction of new legislation on social services, now including development of national standards for community social services. Standards would allow for guidelines when outsourcing social services, and would help to monitor the provision of social services in the community. The project also focused on developing the capacity within the national social assistance system to monitor and evaluate alternative social care at the municipal level. Changes also allowed for access to employment and services to be provided to a broader group of people, and the criteria loosened. For example, an unemployed person under the age of 50 with relevant education and experience in providing social services would be considered for social assistant positions. These changes provided more opportunities for testing new approaches and initiatives in order to identify effective and ineffective practices, and to observe changes in capacity and behaviour. Experience gained through the first year of project implementation indicated that the non-governmental sector in Bulgaria was, to a great extent, unprepared to deliver social services. Therefore, the initially allocated period for capacity development of NGOs (January 2004 December 2004) was extended by another year in order to ensure the sustainability of project activities and the proper performance of NGOs as social service providers and reliable employers.
By the end of 2003, 263 unemployed people over the age of 50 had been hired as social assistants, who were matched with 635 people who needed care.
Scaling up
In the meantime, additional municipalities were surveyed ones with relatively high rates of unemployment, and significant needs of disadvantaged groups. In 2003, four out of the eight municipalities surveyed
Pilot municipalities
portant lessons, and would also provide national policy makers with solid information about the strengths and weaknesses of the NGO sector and the major gaps in its competencies when outsourcing social service provision. Changes in attitudes were also seen in the NGO service providers as the project progressed. At the beginning, passive acceptance or resistance towards the rules and procedures of service provision was observed. There are a lot of procedures and written work we dont have enough time for real work. Over time, NGOs became more active, providing feedback on the application of procedures. We need to think of training for the team and human resources that we need to be better providers. The service providers become stronger organizationally, in areas such as administrative and financial management for example labour legislation and social insurances issues, human resources management and monitoring. They understood the rules and procedures of the Social Assistant service, gained experience and became valuable and desired partners for the Municipal Administration. They also came to fully embrace that caring for disadvantaged groups was a community effort combining their own expertise with the resources of a broader network that includes social workers, state institutions, experts, family members of those benefitting from home care, and volunteers from the community. We learn from each other and grow together. While the eight municipalities began piloting the programme, the project continued to expand to other municipalities. Another sociological survey was carried out in 2004 in twelve municipalities covering six regions where
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statistics pointed to higher than average levels of unemployment, elderly and people with disabilities. Many of the unemployed had pedagogic, humanitarian and medical education. Four more municipalities were included in the project Aitos, Veliko Tarnovo, Gorna Oriahovitza and Kazanlak, bringing the total number of municipalities participating in the project to 12.
In 2004, the project provided work for 758 social assistants, who were meeting the social needs of 1,898 elderly people and people with disabilities, living in 154 towns and villages within 12 municipalities.
A study tour to England was organized to familiarize NGO managers with European best practices and models of social care. The managers from the NGOs in the pilot municipalities, along with four representatives from the Bulgarian Ministry of Labour and Social Policy, the Inspectorate of the Social Assistance Agency and the National Employment Agency, and one person from the National Association of Municipalities in the Republic of Bulgaria visited the Local Government and Care Partnerships Directorate at the Department of Health, the Newham Council Day Centre and Ellingham Employment Services in Leytonstone. The visit was organized to provide project partners with information on the system of social care services in the United Kingdom, particularly for elderly people and people with disabilities. Participants learned about financing social care services, establishing functioning public private partnerships between central and local government and the voluntary or private sector, outsourcing social care services, implementing and monitoring national standards. UK partners also shared examples of good practices for absorbing European Social Funds for community based social care provision. In 2005, the emphasis was on capacity development through training programmes and consulting services not only for NGO service providers, but state institutions at the local level (Municipal Administrations, Social Assistance Directorates, and Labour Office Directorates).
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The Social Assistance Directorate is responsible for implementation of state social policy at the local and regional level. The Social Assistance Directorate introduced information about the new social services to those in the community, and assessed the needs for the services in general, based on the needs identified by each applicant. The Directorate prepared the list of those who should receive Social Assistant care as well as a menu of social services to be offered to vulnerable people within the municipality for approval by the Joint Commission. Those leaving social institutions were granted priority access to the new services. The Social Assistance Directorate was also responsible for reviewing plans for each individual beneficiary every six months, and for assessing the performance of the service provider each year. Those responsible for the community social services as part of the project within the Social Assistant Directorates received basic training in counseling and social services for the particular groups receiving care as part of the project the elderly, people living on their own, people with disabilities and children with disabilities. The training was designed to add to their existing knowledge of social work, and focused on: providing services within a community, patterns for providing home care, formal and informal social care networks, specific responsibilities of the social assistant and conditions of labour. Training also covered communication with beneficiaries of home care, conflict resolution, as well as how to best maintain the freedom and dignity of beneficiaries. University lecturers joined the team of trainers, providing expertise on community development and social work, discussing the philosophy and technical application of community based social services. As a result, a course for community social services was introduced at Sofia University in the Social Work Programme. The Labour Office Directorates coordinate the selection of candidates for Social Assistants, and participated in training on the rules and procedures for project policy development, implementation, management and monitoring of the Social Assistant service.
In 2005, the project provided work for 751 Social Assistants who were providing care to 1,902 elderly people and people with disabilities living in 147 towns and villages within 12 municipalities.
The project relied extensively on the active involvement of the local labour offices, Social Assistance Directorates, and the Municipal Administrations. Effective communication between these organizations and the NGOs was vital. It helped that a social consultant was hired by the NGO many were social workers from the Social Assistance Directorates, and therefore could also bring in specialists (psychologists, pedagogues, psychiatrists) as needed. The organizations came together, collaborating within the Joint Commission, and annual meetings were also held for all project partners.
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In 2006, 700 social assistants were hired and had improved the living conditions of 2,011 elderly people and people with disabilities, living in 161 towns and villages within 12 municipalities.
Secondary legislation bringing new laws to life
While the 12 municipalities were busy piloting the new programme, central authorities were complementing efforts at the national level. In 2003, the state introduced national standards for social services delivered to children and some general standards existed for nutrition, health care, and education services, but as yet, there were no specific and detailed national standards for community-based social services. The Ministry of Labour and Social Policy wanted use the knowledge gained from piloting the new model of community social services in the development of secondary legislation for the newly amended Social Assistance Act. In this case, secondary legislation included a Methodology for the Provision of the Social Assistant Service (and national standards), as well as instructions for the operational organization of the Social Assistant and Household Assistance services. The Methodology detailed the Social Assistant service and touched on human rights, quality implementation of the services and tools for supervision, regulation and improvement. The instructions introduced the services, their goals, terms of agreement, management, basic activities, provision, and funding. Secondary legislation was developed in close collaboration with the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy and the Social Assistance Agency, and project partners were also included. A team of national consultants, supported by an international consultant, reviewed all relevant national documents, and conducted focus group
Social Assistance Act, Regulations on the Implementation
interviews with all partners at both the central and local levels (Ministry of Labour and Social Policy, the Social Assistance Agency, Employment Agency, Municipal Administrations, Social Assistance Directorates, Labour Office Directorates, NGOs, social assistants and service users). National experts were also consulted during numerous rounds of adapting standards based on EU best practices to the Bulgarian context. Secondary legislation supporting the Social Assistance Act provided opportunities for objective evaluation of the quality services. Knowing the minimum standards for the quality of the Social Assistant service allowed for more active and responsible service users they could compare services received to services they knew they were entitled to, in terms of time, quality and confidentiality. It allowed them to become more concrete in their feedback when evaluating the work of the assistants. For example, at the beginning of the project, those benefiting from the service all said they were satisfied with the support and just hoped it would continue. After the promotion of standards and development of the service, they made suggestions for how the service could become more effective and better meet their needs. Beneficiaries and their relatives could also compare the work of different social assistants as well as different service providers. An NGO that provided detailed information about the service, expert consultation to service users and their relatives in cases of crisis, conflict, risk situations, that maintained open communication and that were able to direct beneficiaries to other relevant organizations and services for support was recognized as a professional organization. Feedback from beneficiaries was not only a tool for assessment and evaluation, but also served as a communication channel, and a way to test changes and new ideas. It also reflected the project philosophy that each individual involved in the project makes a difference. People in need helped to create a dynamic national system that was able to meet the needs of its citizens and provide quality care.
of the Social Assistance Act, Integration of People with Disabilities Act, Regulations on the Implementation of the Integration of People with Disabilities Act, Child Protection Act, Regulations on the Application of the Child Protection Act, Regulation for the Criteria and Standards for Social Services Delivered to Children, Local Taxes and Fees Act, relevant Government documents on social policy transformation vis-a-vis commitments undertaken in the EU accession process
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Changes were also observed in the attitudes of those benefitting from home care. They came to understand that they had the right to social services and not because they had been abandoned by their families, but because every person has the right to live an independent life. They learned that the care they received should meet their actual needs, and that if it does not, they have the right to search for other services. They learned that they had an important role they were contributing to the development of a new social service, and the new Social Assistant profession. Support for the locally delivered services came from the highest echelons of government. Those living in small and isolated town and villages in Blagoevgrad municipality particularly appreciated a visit from Deputy Minister of Labour and Social Policy Ms. Hristina Hristova in July 2003. The Minister of Labour and Social Policy at the time, Ms. Lida Shuleva also held a press conference, actively promoting the new services.
monthly monitoring. UNDP also tried to establish the process of monitoring as a consultative exercise and each NGO would receive feedback on positive results, potential risks and issues that needed to be addressed. Qualitative and quantitative indicators (see figure 1) were identified for the annual assessment of the work of the NGO providers, carried out by the Joint Commission which brought together the unique perspective, experience and expertise of each local agency. The NGO service providers were evaluated in terms of administrative performance (organization and management of social services), and quality of services provided (in part based on feedback from service users and local partners). Based on the evaluation, the contract with the NGO service provider may be extended or terminated, and additional support may be provided to them. Originally, project plans included development of an information system for monitoring the implementation of the national quality standards of the community-based Social Assistance service. It was thought that provision of social services in the community based on a common conceptual model for management, also demanded a common monitoring system in order to give an objective assessment of their quality.
In 2007, 700 Social Assistants were hired and had improved the living conditions of 2,037 elderly people and people with disabilities, living in 161 towns and villages within 12 municipalities.
A system was established to monitor the quality of services provided as well as the administrative capacities of the NGO service providers. Successful monitoring of the quality of services was directly related to the capacities of the NGO-service providers to work with common monitoring procedures. NGOs had different experiences and attitudes towards monitoring, especially with regards to regularly
24 July 2001 - 17 July 2003
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Figure 1 Indicators for evaluating NGO-service providers Regarding the provision of Social Assistant service: Coverage of quantity quotas for service users and assistants Provision of support to adults and children with disabilities / chronic diseases Monitoring of social services Management of problems related to service users and assistants Initiation and conducting of additional activities meant for project beneficiaries Satisfaction of service users and assistants with regard to their interaction with the NGO / on the basis of a questionnaire Opinion of local partners about the performance of the NGO partner Regarding the organization and management of the Social Assistant service: Effective management of human resources Maintenance and usage of technical equipment Preparation of labour and service contracts and of individual plans for the service users and social assistants Keeping of project activities and deadlines Documentation keeping and access provision for checking Effective management of finances and accountability Work began on a computerized monitoring system in 2008, to monitor and evaluate the quality of the Social Assistant service, but was halted after consultations with experts from the Social Assistance Agency, who were concerned that the Social Assistance Directorates lacked the capacity to conduct regular monitoring. They also voiced concern about possible duplication of efforts, as another national programme also had plans to develop a computerized management and monitoring system for the Household Assistant service with similar goals, values and principles to the Social Assistant service. Instead, the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy, and the Social Assistance Agency requested the development of Instructions on the operational provision of the Social Assistant service (and Household Assistant service) aimed to support the monitoring of the services at the local level.
Human Resources Development Operational Programme
Four to 264!
Through the pilots, (first four, then 12) a successful model for providing community based social services was established and tested. Quality was, in part, attributed to the collaborative nature of the service, which involved the Labour Office Directorates, Social Assistance Directorates, Municipal Administrations, NGOs, feedback from beneficiaries, monitoring of national standards for home care, and oversight by national agencies. The Ministry of Labour and Social Policy decided to apply the model in all 264 municipalities of the country. With the end of the project in sight, 2008 was devoted to ensuring a smooth transition of handing over the Social Assistant service to the national programme Assistants for People with Disabilities. Priorities included developing a strategy for municipalities who would be adopting the new community services, as well as developing various models for providing the services using local resources. Training was conducted for all municipal administrations, NGOs and private service providers across the country, as well as Social Assistance Directorates to help prepare them to successfully co finance, manage and monitor the outsourced Social Assistant service.
People get used to what is good and want this service and expect us to find a solution. We cannot afford to do without it.
In the 12 pilot municipalities, the prospect that the project was ending was met with uncertainty and anxiety. Interesting to note is that at the earliest stages of the project, the NGO service providers were most concerned with the future of the services, and near the end of the project, it clearly became a shared concern between the provider, the municipal leaders and the Social Assistance Directorates both locally and regionally. The services had been successfully integrated into municipal social policy and local partners had established effective partnerships. Service users and
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Deputy Mayor
their families had come to rely on the support provided by the Social Assistant service, and demand for these services was growing. As such, providing quality care in the community became a priority of the municipal authorities, and they were searching for creative solutions to ensure that services would continue. Discussions revolved around providing services to more beneficiaries or providing higher quality services to fewer beneficiaries. Municipalities had become confident in their ability to continue the project activities that had become integrated into their daily responsibilities, and the focus was on how to fund the service. The project helped the 12 municipalities to formulate mid-term plans for Social Assistant services in 2009 and 2010.
(ICSS). Since 2009, both organizations implement community-based social services projects and provide training and consulting services to interested organizations and institutions. A common understanding now exists, that to develop new social services requires the support of the whole community, as well as clear roles and responsibilities of those involved.
87 year old client, who lost two of her three sons, and lives alone in Pravetz municipality she has arthritis and diabetes. Her social assistant prepares breakfast, cleans, does the shopping and keeps her company.
So far, 7,346 people from vulnerable groups now have access to community-level care, provided by 3,304 assistants.
The Social Assistant service is now funded through two national programmes run by the Employment Agency and the Social Assistance Agency, with funds coming from the state budget as well as the European Social Fund. When Bulgaria became a member of the Euroepan Union in 2007, the Social Assistant service was the first to be negotiated under the European Social Fund. Bulgarias unemployment rate has been drastically reduced compared to 2000 (see figure 2) and the country has benefited from steady growth. The project contributed to the Governments overall efforts to boost employment, and helped to employ members of a particularly vulnerable group at a particularly difficult time, and equipped them with marketable skills. More than that however, the project contributed to the development of a system of providing community care for those most in need across the whole country, and made a positive difference in peoples lives.
At the central level, training was provided to 28 experts from the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy and 22 experts from the Social Assistance Agency on the Social Assistant and Household Assistant services. The project also participated in developing criteria for vocational training for Social Assistants, included into the state educational system. There was no time (or resources) for observing the changes in the new municipalities and this was not planned as part of the project. However, feedback so far indicates that all NGO providers need further training, access to consulting services and supervision of the service provision. Some have received this support, while others have not. A need for a resource centre was indicated one that could coordinate communitybased social services, make policy recommendations, and provide consulting and methodological support. The project helped to develop the NGO-providers network, which was institutionalized in 2008 as two separate but interrelated organizations the Association of the Providers of Community-based Social Services for Elderly People and People with Disabilities (APSS) and the Institute for Community-based Social Services
National Programme Assistant for People with Disabilities and the Human Resources Development Operational Programme
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Advocacy for the project included press trips and public information materials such as brochures, posters, a documentary, a web site and more.
For more information on the project, please contact: Emiliana Zhivkova, Programme Officer, UNDP Bulgaria [email protected] or visit: www.sanebg.org
From pilot to policy: Introducing community-based social services in Bulgaria 17
Capacity IS development
June 2009 Produced by: United Nations Development Programme Bulgaria and Capacity Development Practice UNDP Bratislava Regional Centre Regional Bureau for Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States Written by Blythe Fraser, Violina Ananieva and Steli Peteva http://europeandcis.undp.org/cd www.undp.bg From pilot to policy: Introducing community-based social services in Bulgaria 18